From The Systems Thinker - Pegasus Newsletter

Leading and Learning from the Future or How to Overcome the Blind Spot of Our Times
by Christine Wank

Review: Theory U: Leading from the Future As It Emerges
by Dr. C. Otto Scharmer

In Theory U: Leading from the Future As It Emerges (SoL, 2007), C. Otto Scharmer, senior lecturer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, takes us on a journey to discover and fully use our sometimes hidden inner sources of generative power, creativity, and freedom to address current challenges and emerging complexities in the age of globalization. The book is a synthesis of more than a decade of in-depth research into how innovation and change come into our lives, work teams, organizations, and even whole systems.

In our world today we increasingly face problems of a new kind of complexity such as HIV epidemics or climate change, where neither cause and effect, nor the relevant stakeholders, nor even the problem itself could be clearly defined. Our traditional institutions and problem-solving patterns often fail in providing the right answers or even asking the right questions. Here, we do not need "more of the same" but rather a shift in paradigm. Thus, Scharmer proposes a new model for understanding and facilitating profound change and deep learning. Instead of analyzing and referring to patterns of the past—which are often inadequate or might even be part of the problem itself—his approach centers on learning from and bringing into life the best of all future possibilities. Scharmer calls this process presencing.

In presencing, the leverage point for change and focus are less on what we do or how we do something and more on how we approach or attend to a situation before we act: our interior condition, the so-called inner place or source from which we operate. This interior condition that structures our attention shapes the quality and result of any action. This perspective, as Scharmer points out, is often missing in our daily perception of the world, in management and leadership literature, and even in science in general, which is the reason why he calls it the “blind spot of our time.” By becoming aware of our blind spot, we at the same time discover an untapped resource and potential source of power that we can use to find innovative solutions to current problems and to live up to our best potential—whether personally or professionally, organizationally, or even globally.

The Journey along the U: Listening to our Best Future Possibility
Theory U captures and structures the different movements of this deep change and learning process which takes the shape of a U. In a nutshell, you start the journey down the U by deeply observing the world or a specific challenge with “fresh eyes” and an open heart and mind. You connect yourself to the world outside of your own personal or organizational system and transcend your habitual and often narrow patterns of perception by suspending your inner voice of judgement and cynicism. Next—at the bottom of the U—you retreat from the outside world, find silence, and connect to what is emerging from within yourself, using your inner source of inspiration and will.

Scharmer believes that every person is made up of two selves: our current or old self that is often well known and shaped by past experience, and our future Self, implying our highest and best future possibility. At the bottom of the U, these two selves start to resonate with each other—we experience this feeling of our best future possibility as a deep inner knowing of what we truly want to be and create in our lives. This source of inspiration and intention is a powerful tool and catalyst for action; it can take individuals as well as teams and organizations from good to top performance.

Finally, as you go up the other side of the U, you bring the future into the world not by mere reflection and planning but rather by practice and doing. You develop prototypes of the future you want to create, and test and adapt them again and again before you finally implement them within the larger system.

Three Ways of Reading and Riding the U
Theory U is a treasury full of analytic vigor and empowering inspiration. It can be read and applied for practice in a threefold way. First, it offers a multi-step process template in order to fully understand how these innovation and deep learning processes work. Secondly, the Theory U offers a range of principles and practices for individuals, teams and organisations for training our senses and for bringing the process alive to embody and implement the best of all future possibilities in our daily life and work. Finally and on a personal level, it offers inspiration for sensing what life is calling you to do and discovering that there might be an even higher and greater future possibility that you could not have imagined before.

This book is sure to make an important contribution to not only the current discourse on change management and leadership theory but also to a growing community of practice committed to collectively creating profound change and innovation around the world.

Christine Wank works as a consultant and senior project manager responsible for organizational development for InWEnt Capacity Building International, Germany, an international human resource development and training organization. She has designed and conducted trainings applying the Theory U methodology and uses the approach for process consulting and facilitation of large-group change processes. In her work, Christine focuses on cultural and organizational change and innovation, leadership development, and systemic approaches to consulting and coaching.

Theory U
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Executive Summary

 

Other Works by
Dr. C. Otto Scharmer

Presence in Action: An Introduction to Theory U (DVD)
Presence in Action: An Introduction to Theory U (DVD)

Presence: Human Purpose and the Field of the Future
Presence: Human Purpose and the Field of the Future,
with P. Senge, J. Jaworski, and B.S. Flowers (Society for Organizational Learning, 2004)